People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals
- Alternate meaning: peta (metric prefix)
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) is an international non-profit organization dedicated to animal rights. It was founded in 1980, and its current president is Ingrid Newkirk. With more than 750,000 members, PETA is the largest animal rights organization in the world.
Most recently (in 2003), PETA has received media attention for its boycott of Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC).
PETA is well known for aggressive media campaigns and public demonstrations for animal rights. Reception of the group's actions is sharply polarized.
PETA is also famous for their attacks on mass corporations for their mistreatment of animals. PetCo and Proctor and Gamble are companies for example, which PETA claims are exploiting animals in order to make a quick buck. According to the organization, PetCo forces animals to live in filthy enclosures and are commonly left to die, and Proctor and Gamble tests its many products unnecessarily on animals.
PETA supporters say that the organization has been able to protect the lives of many animals, including closing the largest horse slaughterhouse in the nation and stopping the use of cats and dogs in wound laboratories. They believe the group's oft times radical actions to be justified to combat what they see as avoidable cruelty. They also claim that critics fail to address their fundamental belief that animals deserve some kind of moral consideration.
Critics often claim that PETA is deceptive and uses immoral means to achieve its ends. Adrian R. Morrison of the University of Pennsylvania, for example, claims that the group has "cleverly edited" 60 hours of video tape stolen from his laboratory by the Animal Liberation Front into a damning 30-minute segment, that they cooperated with radical groups, and that they used questionable tactics to silence, discredit and smear their opponents. He writes:
PETA has run advertisements of chickens in coops next to photographs of Jews in concentration camps, and their website has photos of Holocaust billboards used to promote vegetarianism. For example, their website "masskilling.com" states:
Media campaigns and public demonstrations
Opponents of PETA see them as extremists; many take offense at the statements by Bruce Friedrich, a PETA executive. "If we really believe animals have the same right to be free from pain and suffering at our hands, then of course we're going to be blowing things up and smashing windows. I think it would be great if all of the fast-food outlets, slaughterhouses, these laboratories, and the banks that fund them, exploded tomorrow." (Source: Southern Poverty Law Center article.)The "Animal Holocaust" controversy
Many Jewish groups, including the the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), have attacked this moral equivalency between eating meat and the Holocaust of the Jewish people in Europe under Nazi Germany. A recent press release from the ADL states that:
- PETA's effort to seek approval for their Holocaust on Your Plate campaign is outrageous, offensive and takes chutzpah to new heights. Rather than deepen our revulsion against what the Nazis did to the Jews, the project will undermine the struggle to understand the Holocaust and to find ways to make sure such catastrophes never happen again.
Suicide Bombing
Jewish groups have expressed outrage at PETA for their ambiguous moral stance on suicide bombings against Jews in the State of Israel. Specifically, in response to a news report in January of 2003 that a donkey was laden with explosives and intentionally blown up in a failed attack on a busload of Israeli soldiers in Jerusalem, PETA President Ingrid Newkirk sent then Palestinian Authority President Yasser Arafat a request that he "appeal to all those who listen to [him] to leave the animals out of this conflict." However, Newkirk intentionally stopped short of asking Arafat to try to stop suicide bombings that kill people, later telling the Washington Post, "It is not my business to inject myself into human wars."
In June 2000, a federal judge ordered the owner of www.peta.org, a parody web site called "People Eating Tasty Animals", to give up its domain name to PETA for trademark reasons. This web address is now PETA's main web site.
PETA has many famous members and supporters, including Pamela Anderson and Paul McCartney.
See also: animal rights, animal rights group
Domain dispute over peta.org
Famous members and supporters
External Links
References